Canada turns 146 on Monday and there are plenty of ways to celebrate over the weekend

Hey there, time traveller!This article was published 26/6/2013 (1512 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

ON Monday, it's your patriotic duty to wake up at the crack of dawn and paddle your canoe over to the nearest Tim Hortons.

After consuming a hearty breakfast of maple doughnuts, you will crack open a case of Blue, select the Tragically Hip on your iPod and a play a game of road hockey with a group of caribou clad in Canada Goose jackets.

SUPPLIED PHOTO

Winnipeg roots trio Sweet Alibi peforms at the Scotiabank Stage at The Forks.

The failure to engage in any of these stereotypical activities means you do not live up to the Canadian ideal espoused by the wise sage Michael Bublé during the closing ceremonies of the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.

In case you do not recall, Bublé sang a version of The Maple Leaf Forever while skaters dressed as voyageurs swirled alongside inflatable Mounties, moose and beavers, all in front of a worldwide audience estimated in the billions.

For all intents and purposes, Feb. 28, 2010, was the only Canada Day this nation will ever need. No amount of flag-waving or hockey playing and syrup swilling will ever approximate that supremely shticky act of Canadian patriotism in Vancouver.

But if you must celebrate the wimpy-by-comparison Canada Day we hold at the beginning of July -- July! A month with nary a trace of snow nor ice-skating! -- here are your finest options for a public spectacles in the general vicinity of Winnipeg:

The Forks

When: Monday, July 1, starting at 1 p.m.

Where: The confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers, where people have gathered for millennia to watch free stuff and complain about parking. In 1867, it was all but impossible to find a spot on Main Street to leave your oxcart.

The main attraction: Three stages of live music by an all-Manitoba cast of musicians, including Imaginary Cities, the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, Mise En Scene, Sweet Alibi and the Mariachi Ghost. Along with the Scotiabank Stage, there are smaller stages at The Forks Market canopy and on the rail bridge to South Point.

What's new this year? Not content with running a zamboni on used oil from deep fryers, The Forks will power one of its stages entirely by a quartet of cyclists. There will be four slots for cyclists to hook up to a generator that powers the public-address at the Rail Bridge Stage, where the musicians will not be audible without the power of people on bikes.

"If you want to hear the music, you have to pedal," says Paul Jordan, chief operating officer at The Forks. "The more instruments you have plugged in, the more cyclists you need."

This bicycle-powered PA will also be used this winter to power stages on the River Trail, where The Forks previously was unable to host amplified music.

"Now we can do amplified things -- as long as we have cyclists," Jordan says.

What about fireworks? They start at 11 p.m., following a collaboration between indie-pop band Imaginary Cities and the WSO.

Osborne Village

When: Sunday, June 30, from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m., and Monday, July 1 from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

Where: Four blocks of Osborne Street, from River Avenue to McMillan Avenue. Don't whine about the major artery being closed for two days -- it's not as if traffic flows swiftly through the Village on a good day. Half the city empties out into cottage country on the July long weekend, anyway.

The main attraction: Live music on four stages, as well as food stalls set up outside Osborne Village restaurants. From north to south, there are stages set up in front of Music Trader, The Toad In The Hole, the Osborne Village Inn and Wild Planet. Performers include the Lytics, Boats and the Cannon Bros.

What's new this year? A family zone with kids' activities, a skateboard demo and a performance by Al Simmons. Yep, the Village isn't just one big beer garden any more.

What about fireworks? Um, you can always stand on the Osborne Street Bridge and gaze towards The Forks.

Assiniboine Park

When: Monday July 1, from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.

Where: Assiniboine Park, the city's largest green space, centred around the Lyric Theatre.

The main attraction: Family friendly live entertainment on the Lyric stage by the likes of the Winnipeg Police Pipe Band, former YTV reality-show contestant Victoria Duffield and Winnipeg drumming troupe Fubuki Daiko, capped off by fireworks at the end of the night.

Getting in and out: Winnipeg Transit is offering free park-and-ride service from parking lots at Canadian Mennonite University (500 Shaftesbury Blvd.) or the Asper Jewish Community Campus (123 Doncaster St.).

What about fireworks? The show starts at 10:40 p.m., with audio accompaniment from 99.1 Fresh FM.

Dauphin's Countryfest

The main attraction: Manitoba's largest outdoor music festival, headlined this year by Carrie Underwood and Luke Bryan.

Wait, I can still buy weekend passes? No, sorry. This thing sold out in one day. All that's left are passes for tonight, which features the sons of three of country music's greatest performers: Justin Townes Earle calls Steve Earle dad, Shooter Jennings is the son of Waylon and Lukas Nelson is Willy's kid. Passes for tonight's lineup are $77 at www.countryfest.ca.

What about fireworks? You'll have plenty of time to drive back to Winnipeg on Monday. Just watch out for moose in Riding Mountain -- and inflatable Mounties.

History

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